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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Grays Timber Products Ltd v HM Revenue & Customs [2009] ScotCS CSIH_11 (13 February 2009)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2009/2009CSIH11.html
Cite as: [2009] CSIH 11, 2009 SLT 307, [2009] STC 889, [2009] BTC 589, 2009 GWD 8-142, [2009] ScotCS CSIH_11, [2009] STI 585, 2009 SCLR 243

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

Lord Osborne

Lord Kingarth

Lord Mackay Of Drumadoon

[2009] CSIH 11

OPINION OF LORD OSBORNE

in Appeal under the Taxes Management Act 1970, Section 56A

by

GRAY'S TIMBER

PRODUCTS LIMITED

Appellants

against

THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

Respondents

against

A Decision of the Special Commissioners dated 21 March 2007

_______

Act: Ghosh, Biggart Baillie

Alt: D E L Johnston, Q.C.; Acting Solicitor (Scotland) HM Revenue & Customs

13 February 2009

The Background Circumstances


[1] On
9 December 1999, a Mr G was allotted 14,465 ordinary £1.00 shares in Gray's Group Limited, for a consideration of £50,000. After that share issue, Mr G's holding represented 5% of the issued ordinary share capital of Gray's Group Limited. Mr G acquired a further 258 shares in Gray's Group Limited on 16 May 2000 at a cost of £864. These shares were acquired from another shareholder who had offered his shares for sale, pursuant to the Articles of Association of Gray's Group Limited. On 8 November 1999, Mr G had taken up employment with Gray's Timber Products Limited, the appellants, a wholly owned subsidiary of Gray's Group Limited. Mr G had also entered into a Subscription and Shareholders' Agreement, "the Subscription Agreement", with certain other shareholders, who, including Mr G, held 84.6% of the issued ordinary shares in Gray's Group Limited. Clause 4 of the Subscription Agreement provided, amongst other things, that, in the event of a change in control of 50% or more or the issued ordinary shares of Gray's Group Limited, the other parties to the Subscription Agreement were to procure that Mr G's original shareholding be purchased, either by Gray's Group Limited, or by the purchaser of that portion of the issued ordinary shares of Gray's Group Limited. The terms upon which Mr G's shares were to be so purchased were to depend upon the timing of the change of control. Clause 4.2.1 was to apply in respect of such a disposal of shares taking place on or after the second anniversary of "the Completion Date", as defined in the Subscription Agreement.


[2]
In order to deal with the allotment of shares in Gray's Group Limited to Mr G and certain other matters, on 9 December 1999, Gray's Group Limited held an extraordinary general meeting at which two special resolutions and two ordinary resolutions were passed. The two special resolutions were in the following terms:

"1. That the entering into by the company of the Subscription and Shareholders' Agreement among the company, Mr G and certain shareholders of the company in the form annexed hereto for identification purposes be and is hereby approved.

2. That the regulations contained in the document headed 'new Articles of Association' annexed hereto be and they are hereby adopted as the Articles of Association of the Company to the exclusion of all existing Articles thereof."

The Subscription Agreement itself was undated, but the last shareholder to execute it did so on 18 December 1999.


[3]
By Clause 2.3 of the Subscription Agreement, Mr G was to enter into, and Gray's Group Limited was to procure that their subsidiary, the appellants, entered into a service agreement with Mr G and that Mr G should be appointed a director of Gray's Group Limited and the appellants.


[4]
In terms of Clause 4.2.1 of the Subscription Agreement, in the event of a disposal of shares in Gray's Group Limited of the kind previously referred to taking place after the second anniversary of the completion date, Mr G was entitled to receive payment for the shares allotted to him in accordance with the formula set forth in that Clause. The broad effect of that arrangement was that, in that event, Mr G would become entitled to an agreed enhanced payment, in addition to the return of his original investment, disproportionately greater than the amounts received by other shareholders or his percentage of the equity shares of Gray's Group Limited.


[5]
On 29 November 2003, the entire share capital of Gray's Group Limited was sold to an unconnected third party, Jewson Limited. The total consideration paid was £5,903,219, of which a total of £1,451,172 was paid to Mr G, pursuant to a contract between all shareholders in Gray's Group Limited and Jewson Limited, the Agreement for the sale and purchase of the entire issued share capital of Gray's Group Limited, "the Sale Agreement". Prior to this sale of Gray's Group Limited, the existence and content of the Subscription Agreement had been disclosed to Jewson Limited.


[6]
Against the foregoing background of fact, an issue has arisen between the appellants and the respondents concerning the taxation consequences of the disposal by Mr G of his shares in Gray's Group Limited. The respondents have contended that those shares, as employment- related securities, and sold as part of the sale of the whole share capital of Gray's Group Limited, were sold for more that their market value. Consequently, they have contended that the sale occasioned a charge to income tax, determined under Part 2 of the Income Tax (Employment & Pensions) Act 2003, by virtue of Chapter 3D of Part 7 of that Act. If the disposal in question did occasion a charge under the Income Tax (Employment & Pensions) Act 2003, the amount of the income charged by virtue of Section 446Y of that Act was to be treated as though it had been a payment of income to Mr G by the appellants. They would then be required to account for tax in respect of that notional payment under the PAYE provisions, as though it had been an actual payment. By contrast, the appellants maintained that the shares in question were sold for their market value, so that the whole of the consideration received by Mr G fell to be brought into computation of his capital gain on the disposal under the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992. Thus the fundamental dispute between the parties is as to the market value of the shares concerned in Gray's Group Limited and how that value is to be determined.


[7]
The issue between the parties was the subject of a determination by the respondents issued on 3 March 2004. By letter dated 30 March 2004, the appellants appealed against that determination. The appeal was heard on 29 November 2006 by a Special Commissioner. In a Decision released on 21 March 2007, the Special Commissioner dismissed the appeal, making certain directions in relation to the determination under appeal, as appears from paragraphs 49 and 50 of his Decision. The appellants, being dissatisfied in point of law with the decision of the Special Commissioner, have now appealed to this Court under Section 56A of the Taxes Management Act 1970.

The Legislative Framework


[8]
The legislation relevant to the circumstances of this case is to be found in Part 7 of the Income Tax (Earnings & Pensions) Act 2003 and in Part VIII of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992. The relevant parts of Chapters 1 and 3D of Part 7 of the 2003 Act provide as follows:-

"Chapter 1 Section 417 Scope of Part 7

(1) This Part contains special rules about cases where securities...are acquired in connection with an employment.

(2) The rules are contained in-...

Chapter 3D (securities disposed of for more than market value),

Chapter 4 (post-acquisition benefits from securities),

(3) The following make provision for amounts to count as employment income-

Chapters 2 to 6..."

Section 420

"Meaning of 'securities' etc

(1) Subject to subsections (5) and (6), for the purposes of this Chapter and Chapters 2 to 5 the following are "securities"-

(a) shares in any body corporate (wherever incorporated)..."

Section 421

"Meaning of 'market value' etc

(1) In this Chapter and Chapters 2 to 5 "market value" has the same meaning as it has for the purposes of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 by virtue of Part 8 of that Act."

Section 421A

"Meaning of 'consideration'

(1) This section applies for determining for the purposes of Chapters 2 to 5 the amount of the consideration given for anything.

(2) If any consideration is given partly in respect of one thing and partly in respect of another, the amount given in respect of the different things is to determined on a just and reasonable apportionment..."

Section 421B

"Application of Chapters 2 to 4A

(1) Subject as follows (and to any provision contained in Chapters 2 to 4A) those Chapters apply to securities...acquired by a person where the right or opportunity to acquire the securities...is available by reason of an employment of that person or any other person.

(2) For the purposes of subsection (1)-

(a) securities are...acquired at the time when the person acquiring the securities...becomes beneficially entitled to those securities...(and not, if different, the time when the securities are....conveyed or transferred), and

(b) 'employment' includes a former or prospective employment.

(3) A right or opportunity to acquire securities...made available by a person's employer or by a person connected with a person's employer, is to be regarded for the purposes of subsection (1) as available by reason of an employment of that person unless-

(a) the person by whom the right or opportunity is made available is an individual, and

(b) the right or opportunity is made available in the normal course of the domestic, family or personal relationships of that person...

(8) In this Chapter and Chapters 2 to 4A-

"the acquisition", in relation to employment-related securities, means the acquisition of the employment-related securities pursuant to the right or opportunity available by reason of the employment,

'the employment', in relation to employment-related securities, means the employment by reason of which the right or opportunity to acquire the employment-related securities is available ("the employee" and "the employer" being construed accordingly unless otherwise indicated), and

"employment-related securities" means securities...to which Chapters 2 to 4A apply...

Section 421C

"Associated persons

(1) For the purposes of this Chapter and Chapters 2 to 4 the following are 'associated persons' in relation to employment-related securities-

(a) the person who acquired the employment-related securities on the acquisition,

(b) (if different) the employee, and

(c) any relevant linked person.

(2) A person is a relevant linked person if-

(a) that person (on the one hand), and

(b) either the person who acquired the employment-related securities on the acquisition or the employee (on the other),

are connected or, although not connected, are members of the same household."

Section 421D

"Replacement and additional securities and changes in interests

(1) Subsections (2) and (3) apply where an associated person is entitled to employment-related securities (the 'original securities') and either-

(a) ...,

(b) by virtue of that person being entitled to the original securities, that person or another associated person acquires other securities...(the "additional securities").

(2) The additional securities are to be regarded for the purposes of section 421B(1) (securities acquired pursuant to a right or opportunity available by reason of an employment) as acquired pursuant to the same right or opportunity as the original securities.

(3) ...

(4) Subsections (2) and (3) apply whether or not the replacement securities, or the additional securities, were acquired for consideration..."

Chapter 3D

"Securities disposed of for more than market value

Section 446X Application of this Chapter

This Chapter applies if-

(a) employment-related securities are disposed of by an associated person so that no associated person is any longer beneficially entitled to them, and

(b) the disposal is for a consideration which exceeds the market value of the employment-related securities at the time of the disposal.

Section 446Y

"Amount treated as income

(1) Where this Chapter applies the amount determined under subsection (3) counts as employment income of the employee for the relevant tax year.

(2) The 'relevant tax year' is the tax year in which the disposal occurs.

(3) The amount is-

CD - MV - DA

where-

CD is the amount of the consideration given on the disposal,

MV is the market value of the employment-related securities at the time of the disposal, and

DA is the amount of any expenses incurred in connection with the disposal."

Section 446Z

"Definitions

(1) In this Chapter 'market value' has the meaning indicated in section 421(1).

(2) For the purposes of this Chapter sections 421(2) and 421A apply for determining the amount of the consideration given for anything.

(3) In this Chapter-

'the employee', and

'employment-related securities',

have the meaning indicated in section 421B(8).

(4) In this Chapter 'associated person' has the meaning indicated in section 421C."


[9]
The Sections of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 relevant to the circumstances of this case are to be found in Part VIII thereof. They are in the following terms:-

"Section 272

Valuation: general

(1) In this Act 'market value' in relation to any assets means the price which those assets might reasonably be expected to fetch on a sale in the open market.

(2) In estimating the market value of any assets no reduction shall be made in the estimate on account of the estimate being made on the assumption that the whole of the assets is to be placed on the market at one and the same time."...

Section 273

"Unquoted shares and securities

(1) The provisions of subsection (3) below shall have effect in any case where, in relation to an asset to which this section applies, there falls to be determined by virtue of section 272(1) the price which the asset might reasonably be expected to fetch on a sale in the open market.

(2) The assets to which this section applies are shares and securities which are not quoted on a recognised stock exchange at the time as at which their market value for the purposes of tax on chargeable gains falls to be determined.

(3) For the purposes of a determination falling within subsection (1) above, it shall be assumed that, in the open market which is postulated for the purposes of that determination, there is available to any prospective purchaser of the asset in question all the information which a prudent prospective purchaser of the asset might reasonably require if he were proposing to purchase it from a willing vendor by private treaty and at arm's length."

The Submissions of the Appellants

[10]
Counsel for the appellants characterised the issue in the appeal as simple, being one concerning a sale of shares to an unconnected third party. The shareholding had been 5% of the whole issued share capital of the company, but under an agreement, the vendor was entitled to 25% of the proceeds. The question was whether taxation of the proceeds was properly as income or chargeable gain. There was a statement of agreed facts, which set out the relevant chronology, already narrated. There was no question but that the bargain with the unconnected third party, Jewson Limited, was a transaction at arms length. The payment made by Jewson Limited was governed by the Sale Agreement. There were two critical documents in the case:

(1) The Subscription Agreement (B3) and

(2) The Sale Agreement, dated 29 November 2003, (B11).

Counsel went on to draw attention to certain features of the Subscription Agreement, which were of importance. In clause 2 it dealt with "Completion", which was related to Mr G taking up employment with the appellant and becoming a Director of Gray's Group Limited and the appellant. On the Completion Date certain steps were to be taken, including the subscription by Mr G for the shares which he was to acquire. In that connection reference was made to clause 2.2.2. A critical part of that Agreement was clause 4, which related to disposal of shares. That was defined as a disposal of 50% or more of the total voting rights conferred by all the shares. Clause 4.1.1 dealt with such a disposal prior to the second anniversary of the completion date, with which the court was not concerned. However, clause 4.2.1 did operate on the acquisition of the share capital by Jewson Limited and contained the formula which yielded what was paid to Mr G for his shares. It was not necessary to consider that formula in detail; it had been designed to confer upon Mr G a benefit in respect of the increase in value of the shares of the company after his entry to it. The obligation created by that clause lay upon the company, Gray's Group Limited, or the purchaser in terms of the Shares' Disposal. Counsel submitted that the critical point was that the money for the purchase came from the purchaser. It was that which gave Mr G's shares their value to him. The appellants' submission was that what was provided for in clause 4.2.1, under the relevant authorities, gave the market value to Mr G's shares; that was the sum which had to be paid by the purchaser to step into his shoes. There would have been no dispute if the formula contained in clause 4.2.1 of the Subscription Agreement had been incorporated in the Articles of Association of Gray's Group Limited. The concept of market value did not postulate a deemed sale; it focused on the value to the holder of the asset. The test was not what the market would do, but what Mr G could expect to realise. It was not necessary to track the consequences of an actual sale.


[11]
Clause 4.4 of the Subscription Agreement was designed to protect the arrangement established in clause 4.2.1. Likewise clauses 6.1 and 6.4 were designed to fortify clause 4.2.1. Clause 9 provided that the agreement and the rights and obligations under it were not to be assignable. The shares themselves were not assignable under the Articles of Association. Clause 11.2 of the agreement provided that the provisions of the agreement should prevail over the Articles of Association of Gray's Group Limited, providing that if there was any conflict between the provisions of the agreement, they should prevail to the exclusion of any conflicting provisions in the Articles of Association.


[12]
Counsel for the appellants went on to consider in detail the terms of the Sale Agreement. Clause 2 contained the basic obligations of the parties. Clause 3.1.1 had been misunderstood by the Special Commissioner. Clause 3.2.1 was of limited effect. Clause 3.4 provided that the vendors should be entitled to the consideration in the amounts set out in column 3 of schedule 1. That schedule showed the consideration that Mr G was entitled to receive. The consideration, of course, came from Jewson Limited. The Subscription Agreement had been disclosed to them.


[13]
Summarising the factual position, Counsel said that there had been a sale of each and every shareholders' shares by virtue of the agreement with Jewson Limited. The warranties were not relevant, nor were details of payment of the sums due. He contended that the outcome of the case would depend on what was being valued, whether it was the right to step into Mr G's shoes, or whether it was a valuation of the consequences of a deemed sale. If it were the latter, then the appellants would lose. The latter was an unintelligible approach.


[14]
Counsel for the appellants next embarked upon a consideration of the relevance of the statutory provisions which we have already quoted. There was no doubt that the conditions found in section 446X(a) of the 2003 Act were satisfied. The live issue arose out of the terms of section 446X(b). The terms of section 272(1) of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 were crucial to the decision in the case.


[15]
Counsel submitted that if, as was the case, Jewson Limited had paid £1,451,172 for Mr G's shares, that was self-fulfillingly their market value; that was what the market had yielded for them in an arms-length transaction. That sum was paid because of the provisions of the Subscription Agreement, which had had the same consequence as comparable provisions in the Articles of Association would have had. Even if one ignored the actual price realised for the actual shares in the market, looking at the provisions of section 272(1) and 273 of the 1992 Act, Mr G did not get more than market value because it was necessary to take account of the rights vested in him under the Subscription Agreement. Certain propositions of principle were relevant;

(i) Sections 272(1) and 273 of the 1992 Act did not postulate a deemed sale; there was a valuation mechanism to measure the value of a particular asset in the hands of Mr G. There was no deemed sale.

(ii) The sale contemplated in section 272(1) was a notional sale to a notional purchaser in the open market.

(iii) What the Courts meant by a notional sale is the acquisition of a right to step into the vendor's shoes.


[16]
Certain propositions of application had to be noticed;

(1) The market price of an asset was a matter of fact;

(2) Under the relevant legislation, certain factors were to be ignored, for example, any reduction in price by the swamping of the market.

(3) It was necessary to take account of the actual circumstances of the taxpayer and the asset.

(4) It was necessary to impute to the prospective purchaser the right to step into the shoes of the vendor; all of the information which a prudent prospective purchaser of the asset might reasonably require was to be attributed to the purchaser. Following this approach, the market value of Mr G's shares was the sum which he received for them; £1,451,172.


[17]
Counsel for the appellants then proceeded to draw attention to authorities which he contented supported his submissions. The first of these was Stanton v Drayton Commercial Investment Company Limited [1983] 1A.C.501. That case had been concerned with market value. A particular price for shares had been the product of an arms length transaction. Where a price emerged in that way it was to be seen as the market value. Reference was made to the observations of Lord Fraser of Tullybelton at page 512. In the present case the shares of Mr G had been identifiable as a separate class of shares, as they would have been if their status had been reflected in the Articles of Association. Further, Jewson Limited knew of the particular status of those shares; they had been identified as different from those of other shareholders; and, in any event, under section 273(3) of the purchaser was deemed to know a range of information which would have included the status of those shares. It made no difference whether shares were identified as different in Articles of Association, or, as here in other equivalent material. It followed that there were two market values for shares in Gray's Group Limited relating to the shares of Mr G and the other shares.


[18]
Counsel next founded on the Duke of Buccleuch & Another v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1967] 1 A.C.506, which was concerned with the valuation of property for the purposes of ascertaining estate duty payable in consequence of a death. Section 7(5) of the Finance Act 1894 was in substantially the same terms as Section 272(1) of the 1992 Act. The observations of Lord Guest at page 541 were pertinent; he spoke, in relation to market value, of "what the purchaser would have paid to be put into the shoes of the deceased." That was the test for valuation. It did not involve a deemed sale.


[19]
Walton v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1996] S.T.C.68 was concerned with the valuation of a share in a farming partnership for capital transfer tax purposes. Section 38 (1) of the Finance Act 1975 was involved, which required the ascertainment of the price which the asset "might reasonably be expected to have fetched on a sale in the open market". Counsel relied upon what had been said at page 76 by the Lands Tribunal in its decision, which had subsequently been affirmed by the Court of Appeal. What emerged from what was said in the case was that there was no deemed sale. The mode of valuation was by reference to a form of transaction which was notional. In the latter type of transaction the purchaser assumed the identity of the vendor. He stepped into his shoes. The question was what would the vendor pay to achieve that. Reference was made to the observations of Peter Gibson L.J. at pages 85 to 86.


[20]
Counsel for the appellants went on to rely on Inland Revenue Commissioners v Gray (Fox's Executor) [1994] S.T.C. 360. It involved an issue of valuation in relation to section 38 of the Finance Act 1975, which referred to the "price which the property might reasonably be expected to fetch if sold in the open market"...to show an omission. Reliance was placed on the observations of Hoffmann L.J., who gave the judgement of the Court of Appeal, at pages 371 to 374 and 378. The approach was that what was involved was an hypothetical transaction, a notional sale but not a deemed actual sale.


[21]
Counsel for the appellant then turned to consider Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Crossman [1937] A.C.26, a case involving section 7(5) of the Finance Act 1894, which required the ascertainment of "the price which...such property would fetch if sold in the open market...". It related to the valuation of shares in a company, the Articles of Association of which imposed rigid restrictions upon the alienation and transfer of the shares in the company. The House of Lords held that, in the notional sale, it had to be assumed that the purchaser would be entitled to be registered and to be regarded as a holder of the shares, but subject to the provisions of the Articles of Association, including those relating to alienation and transfer of shares. At page 49, it was emphasised that the property, the value of which was to be ascertained, was the whole property brought into charge by the Act, and not a part of it only.


[22]
Lynall v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1972] A.C.680 was another case concerned with the application of section 7(5) of the Finance Act 1894. Counsel relied particularly on what was said at page 693. That passage affirmed the correctness of the "step into the shoes test". That had been affirmed in Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Gray (Fox's Executor) in that case the partnership interest could not have been sold, but it's existence had to be taken into account.


[23]
Counsel for the appellants then turned to consider Hawkings-Byass v Sassen [1996] S.T.C. (S.C.D.) 319, a case concerned with the identification of market value of an asset for Capital Gains Tax purposes. The Special Commissioners took into account the fact that a purchaser would be entitled to appoint a director of the company in question. That reflected the fact that the hypothetical market existed in the real world.


[24]
Counsel went on to discuss in detail the issue of information presumed to be available to the hypothetical purchaser. He referred again to the terms of section 272(3) of the Act of 1992 and to the cases of Caton v Couch [1995] S.T.C.(S.C.D.) 34 and Clark v Green [1995] S.T.C.(S.C.D.) 99 in the present case the Subscription Agreement had to be disclosed to the purchaser because of the splitting of the price paid as between shareholders. It therefore fell into the category of information that would be reasonably required by the purchaser.


[25]
Finally Counsel for the appellant drew attention to Short & Others v Treasury Commissioners [1948] 1 K.B.116, a case concerned with the compulsory acquisition of shares in a company in terms of Defence (General) Regulations 1939 (St.R.& O.1939, No.927), regulations 78(5). The issue related to the value of shares involved in a hypothetical transaction "as between a willing buyer and a willing seller". At page 123, giving the judgement of the Court of Appeal Evershed L.J.,

Said that it was necessary to take into account the value of what each shareholder possessed. Possession of a controlling interest might confer additional value on the holding of such a shareholder.


[26]
Counsel for the appellants then turned his attention to the decision of the Special Commissioner. Commenting on the submission of the Commissioners of the Inland Revenue, narrated in paragraph 29, he submitted that the points made were misconceived. Counsel supported what had been submitted to the Special Commissioner on behalf of the appellants narrated in paragraph 31. The Special Commissioner's characterisation of the effect of the Subscription Agreement and the Sale Agreement as resulting in a composite transaction was inappropriate. The Special Commissioner's analysis of the events described in paragraph 33 of the decision was also misconceived. The timing of the Subscription Agreement was not relevant, since it was truly in place when the issue of the transaction with Jewson Limited arose. Further, the Special Commissioner's observations in paragraph 34 were beside the point, since Counsel was not saying that the Subscription Agreement was to be read into the articles. Counsel went on to criticise what the Special Commissioner said relating to the effect of the Subscription and Shareholders' Agreement in paragraph 35 of the decision. The contents of paragraph 37 of the decision were incomprehensible and apparently wrong.


[27]
Counsel emphasised that he was advancing three fundamental propositions. First, market value was what was yielded by the market. Second, even if one ignored that proposition, section 272(1) of the 1992 Act did not deem a sale to take place; in it, it was assumed that such a thing had taken place; value had to be ascertained on the basis of the "stepping into the shoes of the vendor" test. Third, the vendor was to be assumed to be selling, not just the bare asset, but also anything that gave it "marriage value", if no undue expense or effort was required to achieve that.


[28]
Reverting to the terms of the Special Commissioner's decision, paragraphs 39 and 42 appeared to be the foundation for his decision. Paragraph 39 was irrelevant and not an answer to the appellant's case. Paragraph 42 was wrong having regard to the contents of schedule 1 to the Sale Agreement. The appellants' position was that all of the shareholders in Gray's Group Limited received market value for their shares. The shares of Mr G were different from those held by other shareholders and accordingly it was not surprising to find that they possessed a different market value. What was being valued was the asset notionally sold by the vendor. It did not matter that the special characteristics of Mr G's shares flew off on the sale. The valuation of Mr G's holding had to be as it stood in the hands of the vendor.


[29]
As regards the distinction drawn by the Special Commissioner between the Articles of Association and the Subscription Agreement, Counsel drew attention to the provisions of sections 9 and 378 of the Company's Act 1985. Section 9 provided that, subject to the conditions there mentioned, a company might by a special resolution alter it's Articles of Association. A majority of 75% was required to pass such a resolution. Accordingly what the special commissioner said in paragraph 35 of his decision was wrong. The Subscription Agreement had been subscribed by the holders' of 83.8% of the shares of Gray's Group Limited. The Special Commissioner appeared to have ignored the implications of that.


[30]
The decision of the Special Commissioner was unsound for the reasons given. The appeal should be allowed.

Submissions For Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs
[31] Senior Counsel for the respondents began his submissions by considering the statutory test applicable to this case, in association with relevant decided cases. Dealing first with Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Crossman [1937] A.C.26, he pointed out that section 7(5) of the Finance Act 1894 was involved which spoke of the "open market". He drew attention to the speech of Lord Hailsham at pages 38 to 44. That made the point that there had to be disregarded any restrictions on sale in the hands of the seller, otherwise an asset, the sale of which was restricted would have no market value, or an artificially low market value, which was absurd. Looking at the observations of Lord Blanesburgh at pages 49 to 50, it was apparent that the matter of valuation involved the realm of a hypothetical vendor; the personal characteristics of the actual vendor were to be ignored. The recipients in the hypothetical sale in an open market were also to be ignored. What this case really concerned was the significance of restrictions on sale, as appeared from the headnote. The assumption was made that a purchaser was entitled to be registered under the articles, but subject to the restrictions on transfer contained therein. The case did not suggest that it was necessary to deem that the purchaser was identical with the vendor.


[32]
The Senior Counsel next turned to Duke of Buccleuch & Another v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1967] 1 A.C.506. Looking at the judgements of Lord Reid and Lord Morris of Borth-Y-Gest, it was to be observed that there was no reference to "shoes". Lord Hodson at page 538 emphasised that what was envisaged by section 7(5) of the 1894 Act was a notional sale. There was no issue about that in the present case at all. At page 541 Lord Guest used the expression "what the purchaser would have paid to be put into the shoes of the deceased". That meant no more than what the buyer would have paid to acquire the property sold. Indeed at page 545 Lord Wilberforce said that the Act did not require valuers to step, as it were, into the shoes of the deceased or his executors. So looking at the several speeches in the case, they did not support the "shoes" concept. It was a question of identifying the price of the property notionally sold. Senior Counsel then turned to discuss Lynall v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1972] A.C.680. In that case Inland Revenue Commissioners v Crossman had been challenged but approved. He referred to the observations of Lord Reid at page 693. It was reading too much into that passage to recognise the "shoes" doctrine. Lord Morris of Borth-Y-Gest followed the same approach at page 698. The essence of the respondents' submission was that it was inappropriate to make any assumption regarding the personal characteristics of the particular vendor. What was in issue was the market price for the vendor's property.


[33]
At this point in the argument Senior Counsel referred to Lynall v Inland Revenue Commissioners, in the Court of Appeal, reported in 47 T.C. at page 389; [1970] Ch. 138. What was emphasised by Cross L.J. at page 402 was that, in considering the hypothetical vendor, it was necessary to endow him only with the characteristics which necessarily belonged to all hypothetical vendors, namely that of owning the block of shares in question. Senior Counsel also referred to Inland Revenue Commissioners v Gray (Fox's Executor) at pages 371 to 372. The rights which were the subject of the notional sale in the present case should be seen only as the rights attaching to Mr G's shares under the Articles of Association, not under the Subscription Agreement. At page 371 Hoffmann L.J. spoke of the "rights attached to the property at the relevant date", not the value attached to being the vendor. The question was whether the rights of the actual vendor should be brought into consideration. The answer was only if they affected what an hypothetical purchaser would pay for the property in question.


[34]
Senior Counsel submitted that what was important about the Subscription Agreement was that it bound only the parties to it, not all shareholders. Clause 11.2 of that Agreement was significant, but had the holders of the relevant majority of shares wished to reflect Mr G's position in the Articles of Association, that could have been done. Counsel for the appellants had submitted that whether Mr G's position was reflected in the Subscription Agreement or the Articles of Association made no difference. The respondents' submission was that it did make a difference, because it was the shares that had to be valued, not the rights attached to them by Mr G. Those rights were personal to him. They had been given to him in connection with his service contract. That view was confirmed by the terms of several clauses of the Agreement, in particular to, 3, 6.1 and 7.1. Looking at the whole circumstances of the Subscription Agreement, it was plain that the rights which Mr G enjoyed beyond those as a shareholder were personal rights which he enjoyed exercisable against other parties to the Agreement, but did not attach to his shares.


[35]
Endeavouring to summarize his position, Senior Counsel accepted that the hypothetical sale under consideration was one which must be assumed to take place in the real world, in which the hypothetical vendor was selling what he had. In this case, Mr G's shares were identical to the other shares held by other shareholders. Mr G's rights under the Subscription Agreement did not affect the price that a hypothetical purchaser would be prepared to pay, because they were specific and personal to him and non-assignable; they would not be valuable to an hypothetical purchaser of the company. In short, Mr G's shares were not worth more than any other shares. That view was reflected in the Special Commissioner's decision at paragraph 45.


[36]
Turning to the issue of market value itself, the Special Commissioner had been right to reach the conclusion that he did in paragraph 45 of his decision. The only evidence available was that £6m had been paid for the full share capital of Gray's Group Limited, under certain deductions, as appeared from paragraph 16 of the decision of the Special Commissioner. However, there was no evidence of market value of Mr G's shares in particular, or that Jewson Limited paid more for them than the others. Reference was made to paragraphs 39 and 40 of that decision. When pressed by the Court regarding the implications of schedule 1 to the Sale Agreement and clauses 2.1 and 3.4 thereof, he contended that what they contained simply indicated what Jewson Limited was prepared to pay for the whole company. There was a single transaction. There were no separate negotiations with each vendor. If there had been an agreement between the purchaser and the vendors separately, the price agreed might require to be accepted as the market value. However, that was not the case. The present case was comparable to the subject matter of the decision in Guinness Plc v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1994] S.T.C. 86.


[37]
The approach to the determination of market value of the shares of Gray's Group Limited adopted by the Special Commissioner in paragraph 49 of his decision was legitimately used to identify the market value of Mr G's shares, which were identical to all the other shares of that company for this purpose. A proportion exercise was carried out which was correct.


[38]
Commenting on certain authorities relied upon by the appellants, senior counsel said that Stanton v Drayton Commercial Investment Company Limited [1983] 1 A.C.501 contained certain remarks by Lord Fraser of Tullybelton concerning market value at page 512. Those remarks were obiter, or in any event in relation to legislation with wording different from that involved here. As regards Short & Others v Treasury Commissioners [1948] 1 K.B.116, the case did not assist in the present situation. There had been two different types of shares and two transactions. The case was a very special one, it gives no guidance concerning any general principals. Finally senior counsel drew attention to Barclays Mercantile Business Finance Limited v Mawson 76 TC 446. Reliance was placed particularly on paragraphs 28-33 of the Judgement of the House of Lords, which outlined the proper approach to interpretation of taxation statutes. That process should be undertaken by the application of general principles of interpretation.


[39] The legislation under consideration in the present case was plainly endeavouring to capture the difference between consideration received and market value in relation to some particular asset. It was too easy, but erroneous, to say that Mr G had received only market value for his shares. He had received a certain consideration which was payment, not only in respect of the market value of his shares, but also in respect of certain personal rights which he enjoyed. In all the circumstances the appeal should be refused.

Reply by Counsel for the Appellants

[40]
As regards the market value of the holding of Mr G, the only evidence relating to it was to be derived from clause 2.1 and schedule 1 of the Sale Agreement. The clause provided that each vendor should sell his holding. In terms of clause 3.4 each vendor was entitled to the consideration specified against his name in schedule 1. As regards the "step into the shoes test" it had been approved in Lynall v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1972] A.C.680 in the House of Lords in the judgment of Lord Reid at page 693. The contention that the rights enjoyed by Mr G to a consideration for his shares, calculated in accordance with clause 4 of the Subscription Agreement, were personal rights, which did not affect the market value of the shares, was unsound. The arrangements made in the Subscription Agreement affected the company because they were enforceable against the company. The present case was a fortiori of Inland Revenue Commissioners v Gray (Fox's Executor). A partnership was personal, separate and non-assignable, yet it was taken into account in that case. Senior Counsel for the respondents had not criticised the decision in that case in his determination here, the Special Commissioner had ignored the Subscription Agreement, which amounted to an error of law.

The Conclusion

[41]
The issue which the Special Commissioner had to decide in this case can indeed be simply stated. It was to identify the market value of the shareholding of Mr G in Gray's Group Limited, which, along with other holdings, was sold to Jewson Limited in terms of the Sale Agreement dated 29 November 2003. The significance of that issue is clear from the relevant statutory provisions which I have quoted. If the disposal by Mr G of his holding was for a consideration which exceeded the market value at the time of the disposal, then, in terms of section 446X of the 2003 Act, Chapter 3D of the Act would apply, with the result that a portion of the consideration would be treated as the income of Mr G in the relevant tax year. Otherwise, the provisions of the 1992 Act would be applicable to bring about the taxation of a chargeable gain generated by the transaction.


[42]
In these circumstances, attention must be focused upon the expression "market value" where it is used in section 446X (b) of the 2003 Act. On account of the provisions of sections 446Z(1) and 421(1) of the 2003 Act, the expression is to be taken as defined in section 272(1) of the 1992 Act, as meaning "the price which (an asset) might reasonably be expected to fetch on a sale in the open market." Since the present case involves the disposal of unquoted shares, the provisions of section 273(3) of the 1992 Act operate.


[43]
Against this background it is appropriate to consider such authorities as maybe thought to bear upon the issue just identified. Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Crossman was concerned with the application of section 7(5) of the Finance Act 1894, which provided that "the principal value of any property" which passed on the death of a person "shall be estimated to be the price which, in the opinion of the Commissioners, such property would fetch if sold in the open market at the time of the death of the deceased." Thus the case was concerned with the ascertainment of the open market value of the property involved. The particular issues in the case arose out of the valuation of shares in a company, as regards which there were restrictions on alienation and transfer. The decision was to the effect that the hypothetical purchaser should be entitled to be registered, regardless of those restrictions, and to be regarded of the holder of the shares, but should take and hold them subject to the provisions of the Articles of Association including those relating to alienation and transfer of shares in the company. For the present purposes, it is pertinent to note the observations of Viscount Hailsham L.C. at pages 41 to 42, where he emphasised that it was necessary to include all the valuable rights enjoyed by the holder of the shares in coming to a view about the open market value of them. There he referred to "all these various rights and privileges go to make up a share and form increments in its value." Later he rejected the view entertained by the Court of Appeal to the effect that any property which could not be sold in the open market would escape estate duty altogether. It was necessary "to assume that the property which is to be valued is being sold in the open market and to fix its value for estate duty purposes upon that hypothesis." Lord Blanesburgh at pages 49 to 50 echoed the view that the property to be valued was the "whole property brought into charge by the Act, and not a part of it only."


[44]
In Duke of Buccleuch & Another v Inland Revenue Commissioners, once again the issue involved the approach to valuation of property for the purposes of section 7(5) of Finance Act 1894. The problem for decision in the case related to the approach to valuation of a number of landed estates. However, the case contained certain observations which I consider to be helpful in the context of the present case. At page 541, Lord Guest referred to the operation of the process of valuation required for the purposes of section 7(5) of the 1894 Act. Referring to the words "price the property would fetch" he interpreted them as meaning what the purchaser would have paid "to be put into the shoes of the deceased". I take this to be an emphasis on the need to take into account all of the various rights held by the hypothetical vendor. That same view was expressed in Lynall v Inland Revenue Commissioners [1972] A.C.680. Once again section 7(5) of the Finance Act 1894 was involved in the case. Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Crossman was challenged but approved. The observations of Lord Reid at page 693 are important in the present context. Having affirmed the decision of the majority in Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Crossman, he quoted with approval the observations of Holmes L.J. in the Court of Appeal at page 239 in the case of Attorney General v Jameson [1905] 2 I.R. 218, again in relation to an issue under section 7(5) of the Finance Act 1894:

"The Attorney-General and the defendants agree in saying that in this case there cannot be an actual sale in open market. Therefore, argues the former, we must assume that there is no restriction of any kind on the disposition of the shares and estimate that (sic) would be given therefore by a purchaser who upon registration would have complete control over them. My objection to this mode of ascertaining the value is that the property bought in the imaginary sale would be a different property from that which Henry Jameson held at the time of his death. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the only sale possible is a sale at which the highest price would be £100 per share, and that this ought to be estimated value. My objection is that this estimate is not based on a sale in open market as required by the Act. Being unable to accept either solution, I go back to my own, which is in strict accordance with the language of the section. I assume that there is such a sale of the shares as is contemplated by article 11, the effect of which would be to place the purchaser in the same position as that occupied by Henry Jameson."

Inland Revenue Commissioners v Gray (Fox's Executor) was concerned with the valuation of assets for the purposes of capital transfer tax. Section 38 of the Finance Act 1975 was involved. It provides:-

"Except as otherwise provided by this Part of this Act, the value at any time of any property shall for the purposes of capital transfer tax be the price which the property might reasonably be expected to fetch if sold in the open market at that time..."

Thus again the concept of open market value was involved. The facts of the case are far removed from those of the present, involving as they did the valuation of the deceased's interest in tenanted land and her interest in a partnership which was the tenant of that land. However, the observations of Hoffmann L.J. at page 371 are illuminating in relation to the issue of open market value, where he said:

".....the only express guidance which section 38 offers on the circumstances in which the hypothetical sale must be supposed to have taken place is that it was 'in the open market'. But this deficiency has been amply remedied by the courts during the century since the provision first made its appearance for the purposes of estate duty in the Finance Act 1894.

Certain things are necessarily entailed by the statutory hypothesis. The property must be assumed to have been capable of sale in the open market, even if in fact it was inherently unassignable or held subject to restrictions on sale. The question is what a purchaser in the open market would have paid to enjoy whatever rights attached to the property at the relevant date (see I.R.C. v Crossman [1937] A.C.26). Furthermore, the hypothesis must be applied to the property as it actually existed and not to some other property, even if in real life a vendor would have been likely to make some changes or improvements before putting it on the market (see Duke of Buccleuch v I.R.C. [1967] 1 A.C.506 at 525). To this extent, but only to this extent, the express terms of the statute may introduce an element of artificiality into the hypothesis."

I consider that this passage succinctly describes the approach which requires to be taken in relation to the matter of valuation in the present case. In the course of the arguments before us reliance was placed on Walton v Inland Revenue Commissioners. However, I do not find anything in that case which goes beyond the observations in the other cases to which we have referred.


[45]
In the light of the guidance derived at from these cases, I now consider, first, the terms of the Subscription Agreement, and, second, the Sale Agreement. Of the former, it is to be noted that the Agreement was between Gray's Group Limited, Mr G and the persons listed in part 1 of the schedule thereto holding 83.8% of the issued equity shares of the company. That percentage, in my opinion, is significant, because it exceeds the 75% of the issued equity share capital of the company which would require to be voted to pass a special resolution under section 378(2) of the Companies Act 1985. Such a resolution would, of course, be necessary in terms of section 9(1) of that Act to effect an alteration in the Articles of Association of the company. Having regard to those circumstances, it is no surprise to find that in clause 11.2 of the Agreement it is provided as follows:-

"This Agreement supersedes any previous Agreements amongst the parties in relation to the matters which it deals and represents the entire understanding among the parties in relation to those matters. The provisions of this Agreement shall prevail over the Articles (and any other Articles of Association of the Company subsequently amending or replacing the same) such that if there is any conflict between the two the provisions of this Agreement shall prevail and rule to the exclusion of any such conflicting provisions of the Articles or such other Articles of Association."

Plainly, the persons listed in part 1 of the Schedule to the Agreement, holding 83.8% of the issued equity share capital, as they did, had it in their power to make any change in the Articles of Association necessary to render them in conformity with the provisions of the Agreement.


[46]
It appears to me to follow from the state of affairs described that the provisions contained in this Agreement relating to the price to be paid for Mr G's shares were such that they would inevitably receive effect. No attempt was ever made to challenge those provisions. Those arrangements are of course described in detail in clause 4.2.1 of the Agreement. What occurred in this case was a "Shares Disposal", as defined in clause 1.1 of the Agreement, involving as it did the acquisition of a relevant interest in 50% or more of the total voting rights conferred by all the shares. In these circumstances, I consider that the formula as described in clause 4.2.1 of the Agreement must be seen as conferring rights on Mr G's shares as regards the payment to be received on a shares disposal. After all, clause 4.2.1 provides that the shareholders are to procure that the purchaser in terms of the shares disposal "shall purchase Mr G's shares at a price equal to the aggregate of the sums calculated in accordance with (i) and (ii) below...". The Agreement purports to confer certain rights as to the price to be paid for Mr G's shares on a shares disposal after the second anniversary of the completion date which, having regard to the parties to the Agreement, must inevitably have been given effect.


[47]
It is also worth mentioning that, in clause 6.1 of the Agreement, it is acknowledged on behalf of the shareholders, the holders of 83.8% of the issued equity share capital of the company, that Mr G would, "in accordance with clauses 3 and 4, be entitled to an agreed extra payment in addition to the return of his initial investment and, on such a sale, disproportionately greater than the amounts received by other shareholders or his percentage of the equity share capital of the Company."


[48]
I turn now to consider the terms of the Sale Agreement of 29 November 2003. In terms of that Agreement, Jewson Limited was designated as the purchaser. The vendors are defined as the persons whose names and addresses are set out in Schedule 1 to the Agreement. Mr G was, of course, one of the vendors in respect of the 14,723 one pound ordinary shares held by him. In terms of clause 2.1 of this Agreement it was provided that each of the vendors should sell and transfer the number of shares set opposite the vendor's name in Schedule 1, which the purchaser would purchase. Clause 3.4 of this Agreement provided that:-

"The Vendors shall be entitled to the Consideration in the amounts set out in column (3) of schedule 1. The part of the Consideration payable under clause 3.2.1 shall be allocated to the vendors in accordance with column (5) of schedule 1".


[49]
Thus, on the basis of these arrangements, the purchaser specifically agreed with each and every vendor that the payments specified would be made to the appropriate vendor. Schedule 1, of course, provides for the payment to Mr G of the sum of £1,451,172 which it is agreed was paid to him in terms of the statement of agreed facts and referred to in column (5) of Schedule 1 to this Agreement against the name of Mr G.


[50]
Reverting to the concept of market value which I have considered in the light of the foregoing authorities, I conclude that, upon the shares disposal, Mr G received no more and no less than the market value for his shares. That is what the Sale Agreement provided for in what is acknowledged to have been an arms-length transaction. To the extent that the Special Commissioner reached a different view, in my opinion, he erred in law.


[51]
Having reached the conclusion that I have, it is appropriate to comment in more detail upon the decision of the Special Commissioner. In his decision, in the early paragraphs, he sets out the agreed facts in the case and the law which he considers to be relevant to them. In paragraphs 27 to the end, he narrates the submissions made to him and the conclusions which he has reached. It is perhaps unfortunate that his narrative of the submissions made to him and his conclusions are intermingled. However, it is possible without too much difficulty to identify the reasons he expressed for his conclusions.


[52]
Paragraph 27 of his decision itself amounts to a narrative of the background. Paragraph 28 is the account of a submission made on behalf of the appellants. Paragraph 29, likewise, is the narrative of a submission made on behalf of the respondent. In paragraph 30, the Special Commissioner narrates that 14,465 ordinary £1 shares in the appellants were allotted to Mr G on 9 December 1999. He also states that, at that date, the Subscription Agreement had not been entered into. There is no statement to that effect in the Statement of Agreed Facts and accordingly it is not clear upon what basis the Special Commissioner so concluded. However, what appears to me to be important is that the Subscription Agreement had been concluded well before the issue of the sale of the whole issued share capital of Grays Group Limited arose.


[53]
In paragraphs 31 and 32, the Special Commissioner reverts to a narrative of the submissions made on behalf of the appellants. However, in paragraph 33, he seems to disclose some part of his reasoning. He states that the passing of the first special resolution at the extraordinary general meeting of the appellants held on 9 December 1999 did not constitute a shareholder becoming a party to the Subscription Agreement. No doubt that is true. He then continues: "All that the first special resolution did was to authorise the 'entering into' of the Subscription Agreement; it gave no vires for it." I have to say that I do not find that statement comprehensible. The special resolution passed on that occasion was:

"That the entering into by the Company of the Subscription and Shareholders' Agreement among the Company, [Mr G] and certain shareholders of the Company in the form annexed hereto for identification purposes be and is hereby approved."

It appears to me that that resolution means exactly what is says and authorised the entering into of the agreement referred to. The Special Commissioner observes that the passing of the resolution did not necessarily mean that the Subscription Agreement would ever be entered into. Once again, no doubt that is true, but the fact of the matter is that it was entered into. The fact that it was entered into by, among others, the holders of 84.6% of the issued ordinary shares in the appellant company, meant that it would inevitably be given effect. That state of affairs was reflected in the terms of paragraph 11.2 of the Agreement itself. That aspect of the matter appears to have been overlooked by the Special Commissioner.


[54]
In paragraph 35 of his decision, the Special Commissioner narrates further submissions on behalf of the appellant company, but then reverts to the expression of his own conclusions, appearing to reiterate the view he had expressed in paragraph 33. In paragraph 36, the Special Commissioner again returns to a narrative of the submissions made to him on behalf of the appellants, then proceeding to express a view on a matter which does not appear to me to bear on the fundamental issue. In paragraph 37 of the decision, the Special Commissioner expresses a number of views with which I cannot agree. In the first place he observes that

".... in my judgment, Company, [Jewson Limited] could not have acquired the benefit of the Subscription Agreement for, on completion of the sale of company B's shares, it ceased to exist. (see paragraph 5.7 of the disclosure letter)."

In my opinion, that statement demonstrates a fallacious approach to the matter. Plainly it is true that the Subscription and Shareholders' Agreement ceased to have any significance following the sale of the entire share capital of the appellants, but that does not appear to me to be to the point. In terms of such cases as Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Crossman, Duke of Buccleuch &c v Inland Revenue Commissioners and Lionel &c v Inland Revenue Commissioners, the proper approach is to envisage an hypothetical notional sale of an asset, in the exercise of reaching a conclusion as to its open market value. What is not envisaged, in this connection, is an actual sale; accordingly it is not of assistance to examine the consequences of such a sale. What has to be envisaged is an hypothetical transaction in terms of which the purchaser would be placed in the same position as that occupied by the person the market value of whose assets is being assessed. Thus in this case, it has to be envisaged that the hypothetical purchaser would be placed in the same position as that occupied by Mr G, in other words "in his shoes". Plainly, upon the basis of the provisions of the Subscription Agreement the hypothetical purchaser would have the benefit of the additional value created in his shares by the Agreement. Finally, I have to observe that I do not find what is being said in the last sentence of paragraph 37 of the decision comprehensible.


[55]
Paragraph 38 does not appear to me to contain anything upon which it is appropriate to comment. In paragraph 39 the Special Commissioner observes that no evidence was adduced to show that Jewson Limited paid any more for the appellant company as a result of the existence of the Subscription Agreement than it would otherwise have done. No doubt, there was no such evidence, but, once again, that appears to me to be quite beside the point. As I have already narrated, in the Sale Agreement, Jewson Limited purchased the shares in the company from the vendors, in terms of clause 2.1 of that contract. In terms of clause 3.4, the vendors became entitled to the consideration set out in detail in Schedule 1 to the contract. In terms of what is provided in that Schedule, Mr G had a contractual entitlement to the sum which he in fact received. Thus it is beyond argument that Jewson Limited did pay to Mr G a sum in respect of his shares proportionately in excess of the price at which they purchased the shares of other shareholders in the company. For the same reason, I find what is said in paragraph 40 of the decision erroneous. In paragraph 42 of his decision the Special Commissioner comments on the Sale Agreement. I cannot agree with the view expressed there regarding the effect of clause 3 of that Agreement. The view which the Special Commissioner takes of that clause appears to me to be in conflict with the other provisions of the contract to which I have just referred. For that reason I reject it.


[56]
In paragraphs 43 and 44 of the decision, the Special Commissioner reverts to a narrative of the submissions made on behalf of the respondents to him. He does not go beyond saying that, in his opinion those submissions were correct. In paragraphs 46 and 47, the Special Commissioner gives further narrative of the submissions made to him on behalf of the appellants. In paragraphs 48 and 49, the Special Commissioner simply expresses his conclusions which logically follow from the view that he took regarding the open market value of the shares in question.


[57]
In all these circumstances I conclude that Mr G did not dispose of his shares for more than their market value; thus, in my view, chapter 3D of the 2003 Act has no application to the circumstances of this case. Accordingly, I would have moved your Lordships to allow the appeal; however, since I have the misfortune of having reached a conclusion that your Lordships do not share, on the contrary, the appeal must be refused.


EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

Lord Osborne

Lord Kingarth

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

[2009] CSIH 11

OPINION OF LORD KINGARTH

In Appeal under the Taxes Management Act 1970, Section 56A

by

GRAY'S TIMBER PRODUCTS LIMITED

Appellants

against

THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

Respondents

against

A Decision of the Special Commissioners dated 21 March 2007

_______

Act: Ghosh, Biggart Baillie

Alt: D E L Johnston, Q.C.; Acting Solicitor (Scotland), HM Revenue & Customs

13 February 2009


[58]
The short question to which this appeal gives rise is whether the disposal of Mr G's shares, which were employment-related securities within the meaning of the 2003 Act, were for a consideration which exceeded "the market value of the employment-related securities at the time of disposal" (Section 446 X(b)). By virtue of Section 421(1) of the Act market value has the same meaning as it has for the purposes of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992, namely "the price which those assets might reasonably be expected to fetch in a sale in the open market."


[59]
It is clear from authority, and was not disputed before us, that in order to determine market value it is necessary to postulate a notional sale. The parties appeared to differ, however, in relation to certain additional questions, essentially bearing on the parties to, and on the subject matter of, that notional sale. For my part, I have come to the view, having regard to the apparent purpose of Chapter 3D of the 2003 Act, and on consideration of the certain authorities (albeit authorities dealing with the concept of market value in different statutory contexts), that what falls to be considered is a notional sale between a hypothetical willing seller and a hypothetical willing buyer (the personal characteristics of the actual vendor being, for these purposes, ignored), the question being what the hypothetical purchaser would pay to acquire the rights attaching to the share at the relevant date (being the rights obtained on registration, and provided for in the Articles of Association of the relevant company), and that any personal rights which the actual vendor might in addition have acquired (particularly, but not only, as reward for employment) fall to be disregarded. What, in short I consider requires to be valued is the shares and not all interests which the actual vendor may have had in them.


[60]
In Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Crossman it was held by the majority that the principal value of a deceased's shares for the purposes of estate duty (namely the price which, in the opinion of the Commissioners, such property would fetch if sold on the open market at the time of the death of the deceased - Finance Act 1894, Section 7(5)) - was the price which the shares would fetch if sold in the open market on terms that the purchaser would be entitled to be registered and to be regarded as the holder of the shares and should take and hold them subject to the provision of the Articles of Association, including those relating to the alienation and transfer of shares in the company. Viscount Hailsham LC at page 41 stressed

"The right to receive the price fixed by the articles in the event of a sale to existing shareholders under sub-cl 14a is only one of the elements which went to make up the value of the shares. In addition to that right, the ownership of the share gave a number of other valuable rights to the holder, including the right to receive the dividends which the Company was declaring, the right to transmit the share in accordance with art 34, sub-cls 1, 2 and 3, and the right to have the shares of other holders who wished to realise offered on the terms of art 34, sub-cl 14a. All these various rights and privileges go to make up a share and form ingredients in its value. They are just as much part of the share as the restriction upon the sale. The construction placed upon the statute by the Court of Appeal seems to me to ignore all these elements in the value of the share, and to treat as its value what, in truth, is only the value of one of the factors which go to make up that share."


[61]
It is further clear from the speech of Lord Blanesburgh in that case that he understood the notional sale involved a hypothetical vendor, the personal characteristics of the actual vendor being ignored. At p.50 he said:

"If the duty of the Commissioners is, as I think, to estimate the price which the 'property' as at the time of the deceased's death would fetch in the open market, were it there to be offered for sale, it is unnecessary to inquire by whom the property would hypothetically have to be offered"


[62]
The view of the majority in that case was approved by the House of Lords in Lynall v Inland Revenue Commissioners. It is to be noted that Lord Morris of Borth-Y-Gest, in asking what information should be assumed to be available at the time of the notional sale, said

"In the present case it is clear that the information contained in what have been called the "category B" documents would be highly relevant, but the question arises whether that information would be available. In particular, the question arises whether that information would be available not just to some possible purchasers and vendors but whether it would be available to hypothetical purchasers and vendors "in the open market". This must mean whether it would be openly available to all potential purchasers and vendors in the market or markets in which the relevant purchases and sales take place."


[63]
In the Court of Appeal in the same case Cross LJ, although reaching, in the event, a different conclusion from that which later found favour in the House of Lords, said, of the general underlying approach (at pages 401 to 402):

"The case in favour of the published information test, which was cogently argued by Mr Bagnall, started from the premise - which I think is correct - that one must not envisage a vendor who is a director as well as a shareholder. Of course, the hypothetical vendor may be a director, but he equally well may not be a director. One must, therefore, only endow him with the characteristic which must necessarily belong to all hypothetical vendors, namely, that of owning the block of shares in question."


[64]
Although Lord Reid in the House of Lords quoted with approval a passage from the judgment of Holmes LJ in Attorney General v Jameson (which included the sentence "I assume that there is such a sale of the shares as is contemplated by article 11, the effect of which would be to place the purchaser in the same position as that occupied by Henry Jameson." - on which sentence counsel for the appellants strongly founded in this appeal -) it would, in my view, be wrong to take from that any more than that what was to be assumed was a sale which would put the purchaser in the same position, on registration, as the actual vendor. Similarly, in my opinion, when Lord Guest in Duke of Buccleuch and Another v Inland Revenue Commissioners used (at p.541) the expression "what the purchaser would have paid to be put into the shoes of the deceased", it seems clear in context (and having regard to all the speeches delivered in that case), that he should not be taken to have meant more than that what the notional buyer would have paid to acquire the property sold. Indeed, at page 545, Lord Wilberforce said that the Act did not require the valuers to step, as it were, into the shoes of the deceased or his executors. In my opinion, neither what was said by Holmes LJ or by Lord Guest (nor anything said in a case of Walton v Inland Revenue Commissioners (on which counsel also founded in this connection) supports any contention that the notional purchaser is to be regarded as succeeding to all rights possessed by the holder of the asset in question, including non-assignable personal rights.


[65]
In Inland Revenue Commissioners v Gray (Fox's Executor), where what was at issue was the valuation, for capital transfer tax purposes, of a deceased's interest as freehold owner of an estate, Hoffman LJ said at page 371

"The only express guidance which Section 38 offers on the circumstances in which the hypothetical sale must be supposed to have taken place is that it was 'in the open market'. But this deficiency has been amply remedied by the courts during the century since the provision first made its appearance for the purposes of estate duty and the Finance Act 1894. Certain things are necessarily entailed by the statutory hypothesis. The property must be assumed to have been capable of sale in the open market, even when in fact it was inherently unassignable or held subject to restrictions on sale. The question is what a purchaser in the open market would have paid to enjoy whatever rights attached to the property at the relevant date (see IRC v Crossman ...). Furthermore the hypothesis must be applied to property as it actually existed at the appropriate date and not to some other property .... To this extent, but only to this extent, the express terms of the statute may introduce an element of artificiality into the hypothesis.

In all other respects, the theme which runs through the authorities is that one assumes that the hypothetical vendor and purchaser did whatever reasonable people buying and selling such property would be likely to have done in real life. A hypothetical vendor is an anonymous but reasonable vendor, who goes about the sale as a prudent man of business, negotiating seriously without giving the impression of being either over anxious or unduly reluctant. The hypothetical buyer is slightly less anonymous. He too is assumed to have behaved reasonably, making proper enquiries about the property and not appearing too eager to buy..."


[66]
Although counsel for the appellants sought to derive some assistance from this case in so far as it decided that it was reasonable to suppose that the freehold interest and the deceased's interest in a partnership which held a tenancy on it would be sold together (and thus that in assessing the value of the freehold interest in the estate it was reasonable to assess an aggregate value achieved by sale of both, and to make a relevant deduction), it does not, in my opinion, afford such assistance. Both the freehold interest and the interest in the tenancy were parts of the property of the deceased which passed on death and had to be valued for capital transfer tax purposes. The only assets which require to be valued in this case are the shares held by Mr G.


[67]
In the present case, the rights attached to the shares in the company were those provided for in the Articles of Association adopted by special resolution on 9 December 1999. In particular, Article 5 provided "The rights attaching to the respective classes of shares shall be as follows", and then described the relevant rights under the headings of Income, Capital and Redemption. Despite what could have been done, the rights which attached to the shares allotted to Mr G as provided for in the Articles of Association were not altered by the Subscription Agreement. Instead, it was expressly acknowledged in that Agreement (Clause 6.1) that, in certain circumstances - including those which in the event transpired, as described in Clause 4, - and in consideration of Mr G's "efforts as such an executive director," he would be entitled to

"an agreed extra payment in addition to the return of his initial investment and, on such a sale, disproportionately greater than the amounts received by other shareholders or his percentage of the equity share capital of the Company"

Although the Subscription Agreement gave Mr G valuable and effective personal rights, enforceable against the other parties to it, it did not bind all the shareholders. It was only enforceable against the parties to it. It was not assignable (Clause 9). Clause 11.2, in my view, afforded no more than protection to Mr G against any potential claim by the other parties to the Subscription Agreement that they were not bound by it in so far as it conflicted with the Articles.


[68]
In these circumstances, I agree with counsel for the respondents that the rights which Mr G enjoyed beyond those as a shareholder were personal rights which he enjoyed exercisable against other parties to the Subscription Agreement, but which did not attach to his shares. Mr G's shares were identical to the other shares held by the other shareholders. His rights under the Subscription Agreement did not affect the price that a hypothetical purchaser would be prepared to pay, because they were specific and personal to him and non-assignable; they would not be valuable to a hypothetical purchaser of the company. In short, his shares were not worth more than any other shares. In these circumstances, in my view, the Special Commissioner was right to reach the view that the price paid to Mr G under the Sale Agreement for his shares (being an allocation of the overall consideration fixed by application of the formula in the Subscription Agreement) represented a consideration greater than the market value of the shares.


[69]
Equally, in my view, it cannot be said that the Special Commissioner erred in his assessment of what that market value could be taken to be, there being no evidence that the overall consideration paid by Jewson Ltd (referred to at Clause 3.1.1 of the Sale Agreement as "the Consideration"), in what was a single overall transaction, represented anything other than the arm's length price which that company was prepared to pay for the whole shareholding of company B. There was, in particular, no evidence that Jewson Ltd paid any more for company B as a result of the existence of the Subscription Agreement than it would otherwise have done. Although counsel for the appellants, in emphasising the price agreed to be paid to Mr G under the Sale Agreement, placed reliance on remarks by Lord Fraser in Stanton v Drayton Investment Commercial Co Ltd to the effect that where there was an actual agreed price there was no need to look to market value (page 512), these remarks related to a wholly different provision dealing with corporation tax (para. 4(1)(a) of Schedule 6 to the Finance Act 1965) which did not, as a matter of construction, refer to market value. The remarks were, in any event, obiter.


[70]
In all the circumstances, while certain aspects of the Special Commissioner's reasoning may be said to be unsatisfactory (in particular perhaps, agreeing with your Lordship in the Chair, certain comments at paras. 33, 37 and 42 of the decision), he reached, in my view, the right conclusion overall. For these reasons, and for the reasons given by Lord Mackay of Drumadoon, I have therefore come to the view that the appeal should be refused.


EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

Lord Osborne

Lord Kingarth

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

[2009] CSIH 11

OPINION OF LORD MACKAY OF DRUMADOON

in Appeal under the Taxes Management Act 1970, Section 56A

by

GRAY'S TIMBER PRODUCTS LIMITED

Appellants

against

THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS

Respondents

against

A Decision of the Special Commissioners dated 21 March 2007

_______

Act: Ghosh, Biggart Baillie

Alt: D E L Johnston, Q.C.; Acting Solicitor (Scotland), HM Revenue & Customs

13 February 2009


[71]
I agree with your Lordships that the question to which this appeal gives rise can be simply stated. That question is whether Mr. G disposed of his shares, which it is agreed were "employment-related securities", at a consideration that exceeded "the market value of the employment-related securities at the time of the disposal" (Section 446 X(b) of the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003 ("the 2003 Act")). By virtue of Section 421(1) of the 2003 Act the term "market value", when used in section 446 X(b), has the same meaning as it has for the purposes of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 ("the 1992 Act"), namely "the price which those assets might reasonably be expected to fetch in a sale in the open market" (Section 272 (1) and (2) of the 1992 Act).


[72]
The employment-related securities, to which this appeal relates, were 14, 465 shares in Gray's Group Limited. On 9 December 1999, those shares were allotted to Mr. G. That occurred shortly after 22 November 1999, when Mr. G took up employment as Managing Director of Gray's Timber Products Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Gray's Group Limited, the appellants in this appeal. The shares were allotted to Mr. G for £50,000, in accordance with the terms of a Subscription and Shareholders Agreement ("the Subscription Agreement"), which had been entered into by 18 December 1999 between Gray's Group Limited, Mr. G and three other parties. Those three other parties were shareholders who held between them 83.8% of the issued share capital of Gray's Group Limited. Those three shareholders, Gray's Group Limited and Gray's Timber Products Limited were respectively referred to in the Subscription Agreement as "the shareholders", "the Company" and " the Subsidiary".


[73]
In terms of Clause 2 of the Subscription Agreement the parties to that agreement agreed to take or to procure certain steps, viz: (i) the adoption by the Company of new Articles of Association; (ii) the subscription by Mr. G "for 14,465 Ordinary Shares of £1 each in the capital of the Company (or for such lower number of Ordinary Shares which (would) on issue represent 5% of the issued equity share capital of the Company) such shares to be issued and allotted against payment in full of the cash sum of £50,000"; and (iii) that, if they had not already done so, Mr. G should enter into, and the Company should procure that the Subsidiary entered into, a Service Agreement (in terms set out in the Schedule to the Subscription Agreement) and that the Company should procure that Mr. G be appointed a director of the Company and of the Subsidiary. All of that took place. The Service Agreement had been entered into previously, on 20 October 1999.


[74]
Clause 3 of the Subscription Agreement provided for the buying back of Mr. G's shares on the termination of the Service Agreement. The parties to the Subscription Agreement agreed that on termination of the Service Agreement Mr. G would sell and the Shareholders would procure that the Company would purchase Mr. G's shares at what was referred to as "the Buy Back Consideration". The calculation of the Buy Back Consideration depended on the date and the circumstances in which the Service Agreement came to an end.


[75]
Clause 3 of the Subscription Agreement, entitled "Termination of Service Contract" included the following terms:

"3.1.1 Following the termination of the Service Contract in any of the circumstances described in clauses 3.2.1 and 3.2.2, Mr. G shall sell and the Shareholders shall procure that the Company shall purchase Mr. G's Shares as the Buy Back Consideration.

......

3.2 The Buy Back Consideration shall be calculated in the following manner:

3.2.1 in the event that the Service Contract is duly terminated by the Company on any of the grounds set out in clauses 15.3.1 to 15.3.4 (inclusive) of the Service Contract, the Buy Back Consideration shall be £50,000.

3.2.2 in the event that the Service Contract is terminated by reason of the resignation of Mr. G prior to the third anniversary of the Completion Date and the reason for such resignation cannot reasonably be regarded as the conduct of the Board or any member or members of it or the board of directors of any Group Company or any member or members of it hindering or impeding Mr. G to a material extent in the genuine and reasonable discharge of his duties under the Service Contract, the Buy Back Consideration shall be a sum equivalent to the aggregate of:-

(i) a sum equivalent to:

A

B X C X 0.74 where A equals the number of Mr G's shares,

B equals the total number of Shares,

C equals the Net Asset Value plus the Notional

Goodwill

all as at the date of termination of the Service

Contract; and

(ii) a sum equivalent to 25 per centum of the amount by which the Net Asset Value plus the Notional Goodwill exceeds the Target Net Asset Value all as determined as at the date of termination of the Service Contract.

3.2.3 in the event that the Service Agreement is terminated in circumstances not described in either of clauses 3.2.1 or 3.2.2, including, without limitation, the death or incapacity of Mr. G the Buy Back Consideration shall be a sum equivalent to the aggregate of:-

(i) A

B X C X 0.74 as in clause 3.2.2 (i); and

(ii) a sum equivalent to 50 per centum of the amount by which the Net Asset Value plus the Notional Goodwill exceeds the Target Net Asset Value all as determined as at the date of termination of the Service Contract.

There is annexed by way of Appendix to this Agreement an illustrative and non-legally binding schedule headed 'Basis for share buy-back per clause 3.2.3' and dated 28th September 1999 setting Mr.G's entitlements on certain hypotheses referred to in this clause 3.2.3, said illustration being designed to demonstrate the underlying intention of the parties hereto."

Clauses 15.3.1 and 15.3.2, which are referred to in Clause 3.2.1, provided for the immediate dismissal of Mr. G and his dismissal at short notice.


[76]
Clause 3 contained other provisions relating to the Buy Back Consideration being payable out of the Company's distributable profits, within the meaning of section 263 of the Companies Act 1985, rather than out of capital, and to the procedure that would be followed if a shareholder in the Company, who had not been a party to the Subscription Agreement, sought to prevent the buy back of Mr. G's shares.


[77]
In my opinion, it is clear from the provisions of Clause 3 that the intention of the parties to the Subscription Agreement was to afford Mr. G the opportunity to enhance the financial benefits available to him as a consequence of his being, and so long as he remained, Managing Director of the Subsidiary. Clause 3 did not seek to provide for the assessment of the Buy Back Consideration by any direct reference to the market value of the issued share capital of the Company or to the market value of Mr. G's shares.


[78]
Clauses 4.1.1 and 4.2.1 of the Subscription Agreement provided for the sale and purchase of Mr. G's shares in the event of a Shares' Disposal taking place. A Shares' Disposal was defined in the Subscription Agreement as involving any transaction or arrangement under which a relevant interest was acquired in the shares of the Company conferring in aggregate 50% or more of the total voting rights conferred by all the shares in the issued equity share capital of the Company for the time being (see Clause 1.1).


[79]
Clause 4.2.1 was in the following terms:

"4.2.1 In the event of a Shares' Disposal taking place on or after the second anniversary of the Completion Date, Mr. G shall sell and the Shareholders shall procure that the Company or that the purchaser in terms of the Shares' Disposal shall purchase Mr. G's Shares at a price equal to the aggregate of the sums calculated in accordance with (i) and (ii) below:

(i) the lower of £50,000 and the sum equivalent to:

A

B X C X 0.74 where A equals the number of Mr G's

Shares,

B equals the total number of shares,

and

C equals the Net Asset Value plus

the Notional Goodwill,

all as at the date of the Shares' Disposal; and

(ii) the sum equivalent to:

(D - (E + F)) where D equals the Consideration,

3

E equals the Target Net Asset Value

as at the date of the Shares'

Disposal,

F equals the sum calculated in

accordance with sub-paragraph(i)

above."


[80]
Clauses 4.1.2 and 4.2.2 of the Subscription Agreement made provision, in similar although not identical terms, for the buy back of Mr. G's shares by the Company in the event of a Business Disposal by the Company, of its business, undertaking and assets. The reference to "Notional Goodwill" in Clauses 4.2.1 (i) and 4.2.2 (ii) was defined as meaning "the amount (if any) by which £1,300,000 exceeds the net asset value at the Completion date following the subscription by Mr. G referred to in Clause 2.1.2" (Clause 1.1).


[81]
By reference to Clause 3.5, Clause 4.3.1 provided that the obligations of the Shareholders under Clause 4 did not require the Shareholders to procure a new issue of shares by the Company or the purchase of Mr. G's shares by the Company wholly or partly out of capital. Clause 4.3.2 provided that completion of the sale and purchase of Mr. G's Shares contemplated in Clause 4 should take place concurrently with a Shares' Disposal or as soon as practicably possible after a Business Disposal. Clause 4.4 set out the procedure that would be followed if a shareholder in the Company, who was not a party to the Subscription Agreement, sought to prevent the purchase by the Company of Mr. G's shares.


[82]
As was the position under Clause 3, it is in my opinion clear from the provisions of Clause 4 that the intention of the parties to the Subscription Agreement was to afford Mr. G the opportunity to enhance the financial benefits available to him up as a consequence of his being the Managing Director of the Subsidiary, until there was a Shares' Disposal involving more than 50 % of the issued share capital of the Company or a Business Disposal. The provisions of Clause 4 did not seek to assess the price at which Mr G's shares would be purchased, whether by the Company or by the purchaser in the event of a Shares' Disposal, by direct reference to the market value of the issued share capital of the Company or the market value of Mr. G's shares.


[83]
The provisions of Clauses 5 and 6 of the Subscription Agreement, which dealt with a procedure for adjusting the Buy Back Consideration payable under Clause 3, in the event that a Sales Disposal took place within 18 months after the date of completion of the buy back, and undertakings given by the Shareholders, would not appear to detract from the analysis of the provisions of Clauses 3 and 4 being designed to afford Mr. G the opportunity to enhance the financial benefits available to him as a consequence of his employment as Managing Director of the Subsidiary.


[84]
What Mr. G was paid by Jewson Ltd, in exchange for the shares that had been allotted to him in terms of the Subscription Agreement, was the same sum that he would have been entitled to under the provisions of Clause 4.2.1 of the Subscription Agreement in the event of a Shares' Disposal to Jewson Ltd for the same overall consideration, whatever individual payments might have been paid to the individual shareholders in the Company. That sum was not calculated under direct reference to the market value of Mr. G's shares, or to the market value of the whole issued share capital of the Company. Nevertheless, the calculations carried out under the provisions of Clause 4.2.1 entitled Mr. G to receive a sum which amounted to approximately a one-third share in the value by which the Company had increased between the date he acquired his shares and the completion of the Shares' Disposal.


[85]
In my opinion, those are the principal features of the background against which the question which arises in this case falls to be addressed.


[86]
The provisions of sections 446X and 446Y of the 2003 Act admit the possibility of employment-related securities being disposed of by their beneficial owner for a consideration which exceeds the market value of the securities in question. Such securities can thus have a "value" to their holder, namely the consideration which they have attracted from and which has been paid by an actual purchaser, and a "market value". Depending on the factual circumstances in a particular case, the value and the market value of a holding of employment related securities could be the same or be different figures.


[87]
I agree with Lord Kingarth that in order to determine market value it is necessary to postulate a notional sale. I also agree with Lord Kingarth that having regard to the apparent purpose of Chapter D of the 2003 Act, which incorporates the heading "Securities disposed of for more than market value" and includes sections 446X and 446Y, and to the authorities relating to market value, to which we were referred, that what falls to be considered in the present case is a notional sale of the shares owned by Mr. G, as between a hypothetical willing seller and a hypothetical willing buyer. It is important to bear in mind that such a notional sale is between a hypothetical willing seller and a hypothetical willing buyer; as opposed to a sale involving Mr. G and a hypothetical willing buyer. In my opinion it follows that there should be left out of account the personal circumstances of Mr. G and any personal rights he may enjoy, which are related in any way to the shares, other than the rights Mr. G obtained on his registration of the shares and under the terms of the Articles of Association of the Company. In particular, that involves leaving out of account the rights relating to the shares, which were personal to Mr. G and which he acquired in terms of the Subscription Agreement. Mr. G's rights under the Subscription Agreement clearly had a direct bearing on what he was able to realise when he relinquished ownership in the shares. Whatever that sum amounted to, after it had been calculated following the procedure laid down in the Subscription Agreement, was the value of the shares as far as Mr. G was concerned. However, that sum was not, in my opinion, the market value of Mr. G's shares for the purposes of sections 446X and 446Y of the 2003 Act.


[88]
In my opinion, support that such an approach to the assessment of the market value of the shares sold by Mr. G to Jewson Ltd is the appropriate one is to be found in the fact that Mr. G's rights under the Subscription Agreement to receive compensation on the disposal of his shares, (whether on a buy back by the Company or on any sale to another party), varied from time to time and would have depended on the particular circumstances in which Mr. G might have come to dispose of his shares. That emphasises how his rights under the Subscription Agreement were personal to him, rather than being attached to and running with the shares. Moreover, his rights under the Subscription Agreement were not assignable by Mr. G (Clause 9). It is obvious why that was so. It is clear from the terms of the Subscription Agreement that the nature and exercise of those rights were inextricably linked to the past history and the possible continuation or termination of Mr. G's employment as the Managing Director of the Subsidiary. For that reason alone, it would be artificial to assess the market value of the shares on the basis that by stepping into Mr. G's shoes (or indeed into the shoes of a hypothetical willing seller of the Shares) the hypothetical willing purchaser would be deemed to have acquired Mr. G's rights under the Subscription Agreement in relation to the shares owned by him. The terms of the Subscription Agreement did not turn those shares into a separate class of shares. If that was what had been envisaged, as the time when Mr. G had been employed as Managing Director of the Subsidiary, it is possible, albeit by no means certain, that might have been achieved had the Articles of Association been amended to that effect.


[89]
It should also be noted that under the provisions of Clause 7 of the Subscription Agreement, Mr. G undertook not to sell, transfer, pledge or otherwise alienate any of his shares, other than pursuant to the provisions of the Subscription Agreement or the Articles of Association. In the event that Mr. G had wanted to dispose of some or all of his shares, whilst still remaining in his employment as the Managing Director of the Subsidiary, and to have done so in circumstances not covered by the provisions of the Subscription Agreement, it would appear from the terms of Article 12(b) of the Articles of Association that such shares would have fallen to have been valued by the Company's auditors on the basis of their market value. Article 12 refers to the auditors certifying "the fair value (for the shares) on a going concern basis between a willing seller and a willing buyer, and in so certifying the ... auditors (should) value such shares as a rateable proportion of the value of the whole issued shares of such class in the capital of the Company and neither discount nor augment such value by virtue of the shares representing a minority or majority holding in the Company". That is a further example of how the value of Mr G shares to him, in the sense of what he would receive on relinquishing ownership of them, was dependent on when and in which circumstances they were sold or otherwise disposed of. On the other hand, a market value for the shares, assessed on the basis of what the shares would realise in a notional sale between a hypothetical willing seller and a hypothetical willing buyer, could be determined whatever the particular circumstances in which Mr. G came to relinquish ownership of his shares.


[90]
In the event, when Jewson Ltd came to purchase the share capital of the Company they obviously reached a view as to how much they were prepared to pay to enable them to acquire the whole share capital of the Company. By one procedure or another, an amount calculated in terms of Clause 4.2.2 of the Subscription Agreement required to be paid to Mr. G, before Jewson Ltd could acquire a beneficial interest in the whole share capital of the Company. In my opinion, payment of that amount was the equivalent to a settlement of a debt falling due by the Company to Mr. G, on the completion of the Shares' Disposal to Jewson Ltd. In my opinion, it was a debt that fell due to Mr. G in terms of Clause 4.2.1 of the Subscription Agreement, rather than one arising out of rights that attached to and ran with his shares, when he ceased to enjoy beneficial ownership of them. On the other hand, rights which attached to his shares remained with the shares on his transfer of them.


[91]
When Jewson Ltd decided to acquire the Company, they were under no obligation to enter into a Sale Agreement with the shareholders of the Company which provided, as the Sale Agreement dated 29 November 2003 did, that Jewson Ltd would purchase Mr. G's shares directly from him at a price that was obviously calculated under reference to Clause 4.2.1 of the Subscription Agreement. The Sale Agreement giving effect to the Shares' Disposal could have been differently structured, and Mr. G's shares could have been purchased by the Company itself. Had that occurred, Mr. G would have received from the Company exactly the same amount as the consideration he received from Jewson Ltd. That would have occurred by way of a direct implementation of the provisions of Clause 4.2.2 of the Subscription Agreement, rather than the making of a payment based on a determination that the consideration payable to Mr. G was the market value of his shares, in the sense of being what a willing purchaser in the open market would have paid to a willing seller to enable the purchaser to enjoy the rights that attached to the seller's shares, as opposed to the personal rights of Mr. G, as Managing Director of the Subsidiary, under and in terms of the Subscription Agreement. Obviously, had the Company purchased the shares directly from Mr. G, the sums payable by Jewson Ltd to the other individual shareholders would have been structured differently.


[92]
In my opinion, although Jewson Ltd agreed to pay the sum they did to Mr. G, and the other vendors of shares in the Company agreed that should happen, what was agreed did not result in the sum paid by Jewson Ltd to Mr. G becoming the market value of his shares, within the meaning of section 272(1) and (2) of the 1992 Act. When, as happened in the present case, there has been an arm's length disposal of a whole class of shares, the market value of individual shares, and of holdings of such shares, falling with that class, would normally be obtained by dividing up the total consideration paid by the number of shares sold. When personal arrangements relating to an individual shareholder, whose shareholding falls to be treated as employment-related securities, result in that shareholder receiving what amounts to a disproportionate proportion of the total consideration paid by the purchaser of the whole class of shares, then the provisions of Sections 446X and 446Y of the 2003 Act come into play. There is no dispute that Mr. G received a disproportionately greater amount for his shares in the equity share capital of the Company than its other shareholders did. Clause 6.1 of the Subscription Agreement foresaw that as a possibility. That possibility has now materialised. In my opinion, it results in the application of Sections 446X and 446Y of the 2003 Act.


[93]
For these reasons, and also for the reasons set out by Lord Kingarth in paras. [58] - [70] of his Opinion, with which I agree, I am unable to agree with your Lordship in the Chair and have reached the view that the appeal should be refused.


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